Diabetes is a disease of increased blood glucose levels. Glucose is a type of sugar that comes from the intake of food. Insulin is a type of hormone that removes the glucose from the blood and moves it into the cells to provide them with energy. There are two different types of diabetes: type 1 and type 2. Type 1 diabetes is when the body does not make any insulin. Therefore, glucose stays inside the blood and does not move into the cells. Type 2 diabetes, which is commonly associated with obesity, is when the body is either resistant to the effects of insulin or when the body does not produce enough insulin. Increased levels of glucose in the body causes severe damage to the eyes, kidneys, and nerves.
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2

No specific question:
The fasting blood sugar results you are providing do indeed point to diabetes. Are you under the care of a physician and being treated for the diabetes? If you are on medication I would advise that you follow up with your physician to discuss your results. Heed the lifestyle advice that your doctor gives you, changing your diet and exercising will greatly affect you long term outcome.
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4

Vast majority:
Of times related to sulfonylureas or Insulin therapy not used correctly by patient or md
we have 8 drug classes approved for diabetes control before need Insulin that don't cause hypoglycemia, and are now preferred!
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5

Yes:
Most normal people shouldn't, since the liver can always make glucose. However, if you have problems with your adrenal gland or a tumor that produces Insulin (insulinoma) it could happen.
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6

Possibly:
Many years before overt diabetes starts, someone at genetic risk of diabetes can lose 'first-phase 'insulin release, resulting in an imbalance of sugar-to- Insulin levels -low blood sugar- 4-5 hours after eating, especially with sweets.
Treatment is avoid sweets
sometimes need to treat with dpp-4 inhibitors- safe, no undue side effects
see dm specialist as most internists unaware of this.
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8

Sleep disorder?:
You may be experiencing these problems if you have a sleep related breathing disorder. If you are having problems getting to sleep, staying asleep, waking up several times a night, or excessive daytime sleepiness you should talk to your md for an evaluation of your sleep. Undiagnosed sleep problems are extremely common and can can be instrumental in creating prediabetic conditions.
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10

Hypoglycemic:
Normal blood sugar 1 to 2hours after a meal in non-diabetics is below 100mg/dl. The range is considered to be between 70 and 100. If yours falls below this you are considered to be in the hypoglycemic range but in as much as your are not on medications to lower your blood sugar or have a condition that will do this, or it continues to drop,it is not dangerous. If you have symptoms, see a doctor.
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The blood sugar concentration or blood glucose level is the amount of glucose (sugar) present in the blood of a human or animal. The body naturally tightly regulates blood glucose levels as a part of metabolic homeostasis. Glucose is the primary source of energy for the body's cells, and blood lipids (in the form of fats and oils) are primarily a compact energy store.
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